The evening world. Newspaper, August 7, 1920, Page 2

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ms eee eee CROWDS, | OFF: MARTIAL LAW Won't Recognize Union in ly. Tribute to Candidate Taking Men Back. at Notification. Many, Including Women and Children. ecaars wee 7—Two hundred lers un Oot. C. C. Ballou ar- by thousands, ee ved here early to-day from Fort y's leadership and rank and) Logan to maintain order just as to-day in the ceremony |eaders of the tramway men’s union ir leader to the Amer-| Voted to recommend calling off the AM Staten, tenri- |*treet car men's strike which has been followed by two days of violence re- sulting in the deaths of three men <a ns of a dozen persons Inst the Demamntie "Martial tan was declared in Denver gave eet over to fe ite to-day as a result of street car strike or Notables at Lun- cheon at Trail’s End. DAYTON, ©., Aug. 7—Democratic i! i Ht tating: tl f HOE OF COX, DECLARED NITY Dayton and Visiting Thousands Trolley Companies Say They CITY GAY WITH FLAGS 3 MORE DEAD IN ers “Franklin D, Roosevelt. and, Police Fire on Mob, Wounding THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, AUGUST 7, 1920 ) RST PHOTO BOM CANT TALKING TO JO.FAYNE CgoT) Gov. Estaban Cantu of Lower Californi 0} OF CANTUS FORCES TERNATIONAL has just started a revolution in Mexico, and President Huerta has sent @ commission to ask him to . He has 3,000 troops and several airplanes, The photograph shows him fire Presidential notification. A riots which were resumed last night. talking to Lieut. J. O, Payne, who stands with his hat off, Lieut. Payne, who is training Cantu’s Bvinore, was for- Doliday was in force for the cere. |7M# decision was reached before| merly an instructor at March Field, California, moniés at the Montgomery County |@*¥" 4¢ 4 conference of Mayor Dailoy, - . Pir Grounds, stout a mile thom the! Police oMolain State Attorneys and U.S. FLYERS SHOT the while Ohio and | °°! . Federal troops ere ooc- | l ] OUSE Se Sir ls cat scl sos oy uring he city i co-operation with DOWN IN POLAND ‘ ‘ epecial traina, automobiles and other |" Police in maintaining order, aautende. " bed tramway men were to meet at BY BOLSHEVIKI | fat lock this morning to take a vote i 4 ie - , se Paper rig apparel age,{0% the Tecommendation of their Third American Airman , Killed fe diddy and benders, with elt executive committee. Gov. Shoup, in} Recently, According to Ad- * Setavifercen. Lithopreohed 4 statement at Colorado Springs, said * vices in London. et Gov. Cox ty were on| {Dt the action of the union leaders = piges4 ae gate seaty | WONG not serve to halt the arrival —_—— ' LONDON, Aug, 7. —_+—— display. @air grounds, of troops. Five hundred more aol- _ = ‘WO American officers, flying <for Kbaut4,000 were provided in the] aiers were under orders at Camp (Continued From First Page.) 5 Etat ieation Keo. neater, (Continued From First Page.) ——s iag-dlecktd amphitheatre and special minston to leave early to-day. oe have been shot down by Sia: ayxttiary grandstands. In & statement immed shortly after | PY Soviet troops have been reported,| Botshevik war plane behind the | arbitration be taken out of Its con- Marc¥ing delegations swept through | ene apnountemenit of the union lead- | #8d even there they have been limit-] Russian front, according to the | tract with the city is proof enough for the streets with blaring bands and | ors, Frederick W. Hild, general man. | by the desperate fighting of the| standard, It names Capt, Merion |me that the company is ready and were reviewed by Gov. Cox and thelager of the tramway company, an-| Poles. Cooper and Capt. George Kelly, _| Willing to make a battle ground of other party notables et the fair| pounced that the striking car men| Polish forces have been forced to “The Standard says the thira. |the Court House job in its contest grounds, ould be taken back dut that there |Fetire from Terespol, about four miles} American recently shot down |With the building trades orguniza- J. Gprisg McMahon, local Demo-| would be no working agreement with | West of Brost-Litovsk, and have lost|! was killed. ‘They are all members | tons of this city. ‘oratic leader and close friend of Gov.| the union and the union would not be| Muramiec, about five miles to the| of the American flying squadron “It became necessary to readvertise gh ing officer. Clergy recognized, The siatement furthor|#uth. ‘Thus the fiolshevikt have! rieyting with the Poles, number. |the steel bids because they were not for the invocation and bene-| declares that preference in filling | t/ned a foothold on the west bank of! ing about a dozen men, formerly |!" conformity with the specifications. diction, respectively, were the Rev.| vacancies would be «given the strike | the Bug River in this rexion, but it is ian Pile Letaoe soa. | 12 the fece of my protest tho Comp- wien Hale of the Reformed breakers employed by the company to| Probable their further progress will Quite in France, and now ealiea [troller readvertised them without the oe aie Nov. artin.P. Sevine | ram care, i lade ob sch larger ge a aay the Kosclusko squadron, UL asienemne atte Angels’ Reman Catholic ‘The Federal troops was in- > pie Mamhat Pot ent Cur- mallee neces y gued lagt night when @ mob attacked | must be stormed if the Soviet le- |= RSS - , ran and Commissioner of Public Prior to the fair grounds ceremony | the East Denver car barne and was | sions are to gain ground there, ‘ Works Sullivan of Queens, represent. the Governor and Mrs. Cox had as|"@pelled with rifle fire. Three men| Northwest of Brest-Litovak, along ing President Connolly, sided wita La guests at a noon buffet tunchoon at | Were killed and a dozen persona, jn-|tho Bug River, ‘the Polish have Guardia, but the other memhers of ‘Trails End the members of the Notit- |Cuding women, girls und boys, were |launched vigorous counter-attacks the Estimate Board agreed to read- . ation and National Cotnmittees and wounded. Several sinilar gatherings |and have succeeded in’ driving back vertise the bids without the arbitra- other prominent leaders. Mr, Roose- bad bgen bdroken ‘WD ocariior in the |across ‘the river Bplshevik detach- tiom provision. This action was con- ‘velt, hie wife and daughter and Chait. eventing. ments which had succeeded tn mavh- sidered a decided blow against or- a" fF the National Between 400 and 600 American Le. |ing the left bank of the xtream, Fur- De ganined tabor because itis known thas tee were attcite: the Governor's howss |#!°" be stig Neyer pi nalaci ee neete Vine the seapiber to- labor leaders felt they would secure wa ie Ea P ruse! rontier, a % ‘ notifioation period. which e for the ey wore during ie ‘or! mal man , justice In an appeal to city officials, ¥ wen tion’ to , Cox and Mr. ‘War, are patrolling the outlying dis-|reat battle. is being fought, but no ‘on the other hand, contractors who Sw oat " ‘on the . tricts of the city to relieve the regu-|details of the outoome have been | had determined to fight union labor it stand were provided for @ group of rode gestarnsy for duty in the down- ehilaitrato sel alah td dy sind 5 necessary, opposed the axpitration party chieftains. Mrs. Cox and the ‘| ‘in. Kuropatkin With Great Army Provision because they claimed it por. . Armored motor cars equipped with : ’ mounted machine guné are patrol- ling the down town district, Other machine guns were mounted on tops of buildings near possible trouble centres, More than 1,000 civilians volunteered to assist the police force im maintaining order. They were armed with army rifles, sawed-off All theatres, including moving plo- ture houses, in the downtown section are closed. Citizens were requested * |by Mayor Builey to remain at home. Cara will be operated aguin to-day, Frederick W. Hild, General Manager ‘the of the tramway company, announced. eeoeein—oe winjoh reached « pinnacle ls MORE TROOPS elec '® promises io be txe| ARRIVE, TO END RIOT Ae nn Oey IN ILLINOIS TOWN Casualties Now Number Five Dead, 50 Wounded—Quiet Is Restored. vi and Cox “ ——»——— In ancther modifie¢ form was the) JOHNSON CITY, Ill, Aug 7—Five of, the Buckeye” (87th Di-|hundred additional Gtate troops ar- rived early to-day in West Frankfort, man boundary, the Poles are well in- trenohed and appear to holding their own in spite of savage assaults agalnst their pohitions. | In the southern sectors of the front| fighting of @ serious nature is going on, and the Poles. seem to be guining ground at some points. Warsaw despatchos tell of a great rush of foreigners to leave and that all outgoing roads are congested with refugees, Little mention is made of the fighting except that plans for the defenso of the capital are being rushod with feverish activity. Diplometically the situation would seem to Le easier, According to the latest information the British Government has accepted the Bolshevik note insisting on a sep- | arate peace with Poland and prom. | ling to attend the London conference subsequently on the conditions they have aid dawn. Tho troth 8, Premier Lioyd’ George had no option, for any proposal to go to wur for the Polos against Russia would have been re- pudiated by the country. The Labor Party, to make sure no suo! ‘enterprise can be undertaken, has summoned an yrgent conference of trades union and other bodipa to moet in London Monday, and in the y be @or fade weather was |five miles from here, to reinforce mil- oy doude, and by |itlamen already on the ground, in g’olock @ light rain enrived, with [suppressing race rioting. predicted for) ‘Tho Uttle mining town was reported ‘The rain waa |to be comparatively quiet to-day fol- pend the street |lowing spormmdic fighting bytween Dbobhing um-|amall groupe of citizens and some of ‘over gaudy but |the few remaining foreigners lust of the visiting dele- night, which was quickly suppressed by the soldiers. eacly took on a| ‘Cusualties already had totaled five tents of jdead and more than 50 wounded Practionlly all the homes of foreign residents had been razed by incen dimry fires and many store buildings were burned. The most potent factor in relieving the tense situation was said to be the general exodus of the foreign popula- jtion following the deoree that “all for- ¢ignere must ¢6.” Direct communication from West Frankfort was still inxpossible early to-day owing to telegraph and ‘tele- phone wires having been cut by the i | i Is i t 7 2 4 After qn. investigation the Jamaica police announced to-day that there was to crime or mystery involved in the death of Louls Purchase, a travelling mlenmen, Bai lived with his ‘ire Tower Ville, Anhe's Avenue, = | ehot uredey nigh f Sed Sai, Li 2, "ahs “Cink lok BiBW: Graal sacted en hm the on The town was completely in change ica, of the military, under Brig, Gen. Frank B. Wells, who arrived late last night. All pool rooms, ice cream pa: lors and other gathering places of the hotel manager, (youth of the town were cloned. Little Child Falls Five Fieors— ‘Lives, Mary Dehli, four years old, of No. mean thme haw issued & manifesto protesting» in the strongest against the support of Poland. Thi again, the’ British Cabinet is y much alive to the German dang they, fatled to propitiate the Bolshe- viki, for @ junction between the Russian and German Reds would be ‘a calamity of untold possibilities, eee SAY POLISH CAPITAL 1S MOVED TO POSEN East Prussian Paper Hears) Workers in Warsaw Urge Formation of Soviet. JOHANNISBRRG, East Prussia, Aug, 7 (Associated Presy).—A report that the Polish Government has fled to Posen and that the Soviet forces aro only forty dcllometres from War- | saw ‘s printed in the Johannisborg Zeitung. The-report is alleged to have emanated in Warsaw, The Warsaw correspondent of the nowspaper says that the fall of War. saw is imminent, that the Bolshe, viki are still advancing, and that it is believed they have out off the es- cape of the Polish troops into the Polth corridor, Jests, and to indicate @ determination |1,000 British, 5,000 Persians and about | that mitted Inbor leaders to hol g -politi- | cal club over the heads of the officitls Jor those who might be appointed . by is to settle labor disputes, But President La Guardia says he doesn’t propose that the Lethlehem Steel Bridge Corporation or any other firm rs shall make a city struc- ¢ ground for a labor fight. Reported to Be Moving on Capital of Shah. WASHINGTON, Aug. just received at the Depart- ment js causing greatly Increased tn- terest here in the Russian-Polish sit- —Advices | President La Guardia decided to uation, i send a second telegram of inquiry It is reported that Russian after he had heard from the Bethley movement has. deyeloped in Per- hem Company, ‘This wag despatched sla that is interpreted to mean ‘© the McClintlek-Marshall Company, stev] bridge builders of Pittsburgh, which was one of the Bethlehon Com. pany's competitors on the Court House on the part of the Russians to take | Pid. ¢ the Meotintick 6 offer ‘ Heh | ¢ answer of the McClintick-Mar- tho offensive generally aguinst the) oI Company follows: “Replying to capitalistic” powers, lyour telegram of the 2d Instant re- Old Gen, Kuropatkin, Russian com- gurding our proposition to the city mander in the War with Japan, is re- e New York County Court wish to advise you that a challenge to fritieh Asiatic inter- we ported at the Bead of 4 vast ary | we work under open shop conditions; moving on Tehcran. Word came | that is, we employ men irrespective of fvom John L. Caldwell, American |¢heir membership or non-membership Minister in Persia, that the Tus-|in any organization, and will not be sian forces were porilously neat | Pestricted in our selection to men of any particular orranization, We generally employ both union and non- union men at the same time on our jobs, whenever the union men are willing to work alongside of men that do not belong to their organiza- tion,” ‘The answer is signed by G. R, Enscoe, contracting engineer. “Tho situation is simply this," said President La Guardia. “As soon as non-unlog steelworkers are employed on the proposed new Court House every union stonemagon, plumber and to Tabriz and Kermanshaw, and that Teheran might be evacuated at any time. The Shah of Persia with bis | family and his Government Is medi- tating a removal of the capital. The Russian movement is ln con- with the Turkish, Egyptian ond Indian national movement, and opposing them are only 11,000 troops, nection as many Wgyption Soldiers, all uader | carpenter will likely walk out and the British command, city will be left without a clause in Minister Caldwell was immediately |its contract by which it can arbitrate, bled “correct instructions” author-| “No one objected to arbitration izing him to direct as he thought |clauses tn contracts except the steel best the conduct of the Amerioan|firms. But they cannot make the Consul in his jurisdiction; which|claim that a city job ts like a gov- moans that he is to give the word|ernment job and must be finished without a walkout.” Although the Bethlehem Steel Com- pany is the lowest bidder it has not yet been formally awarded the con- tract. Action will be taken at Mon- day's meeting of the board. Mean- while labor leaders in this elty will) endeavor to induce Estimate Board members to insist upon an arbitration | clause in all contracts. If the clause | is reinserted the clty may wait a long | time for steel bid, for it Is under- | stood that nearly all the big steel | construction’ concerns take the same attitude as the Bethlehem and the McClintick concerns. NEPHEW HELD FOR ROBBERY. when-they are The military to leave thelr posts, lo figure that the Kurop t was held in abeyance until Russia was satisfied that she had Poland defnitely beaten, nd that it# launching means an at- tempt to destroy England in Asia. A movement on Constantinople is forecast if the Red Army is not checked, and the opinion is hazarded Russian control of the Darda- nelles is one of the direct objects. JUGO-SLAVS FIRE ON ITALIAN WARSHIP Albanians Capture Kastrati From peiral % A Mrs, Farrell Unwittingly Causes Serbians, Say Advices to Tonth'e Arrest, Rome. Mrs. Margaret Farrell, of 299 Wood- bine Street, Brooklyn, jh: no ide hy LONDON, Aug, 7.—Firing upon an eh Pekar i would bring her own nephew to trial When she complained to the police that her home had been burglarized July 25, Italian battleship from Jugo-Slavs is reported Fiume by in ‘a Central << Rath Shepley Goes to Hospital. Ruth Shepley, the actress, was taken to Roosevelt Hospital last night follows ing an acute attac right’ pon early fenry W. Cave of No. t. Miss Shepley be- came 12 en Thursday while in bathin Lon her troul Tt was é if ner i a condiloa was " Shin a News despatch from giv \re Rome, which when a gold ring and @ $50 Liberty Bond were taken, But nephew, hi Lawrence Farrell, and small arm ammunition. the hi The boxes were too hot to handle with handa, On the elghth night it got so 18, held waa Gates without ball to-day in ‘Avenue Coprt on a robbery Farrell was picked other young men ide wae 1. yet he gave ae oe Sin) vee quod out the robbery. ‘He Ie alleed he te fier tas ana yawned” he rine tleship returned the * and dispersed the Jugo-Slavs. t 18 officially announced, adds the several Central News despateh, that ghe Al- |\ bantans have ocoupled Kastratl, cup- | free {uring three machine guns and’ driv. | , ing the Serdians, who recently selged ‘ve town, over the frontier. First Photo of Mexico’s NewRevolutionists SSF SURROUNDS am|| TWO AUTO BANDITS <j) ATENDOF CHASE Dashed Through Town with ‘Woman Struggling on Running Board. WORCESTER, Mass,, Aug. 7.—Sur- rounded in @ swamp, in Webster, Frederick Deelauriers and Jules Des- lauriers, brothers, of Blackstone, are being hunted to-day by police ant civilians on a charge of being auto bandits who have been operating in southern Massachusetts, northern Thode Island and Connecticut. Every road leading from the swamp is guarded by armed men. As their car entered Webster tast night Frederick Desiauriers made an attack on his wife. She was riding on the running board and struggling. with her husband, who wae driving the car. Her cries attracted atten- tion and a train of automobiles chased the two cars. After passing through the town, Deslauriers threw his wife and gon from the running board, abandoned the car and entered the one which his brother was driving. ‘This second car entered the swamp, where it was abandoned, and the posse surrounded the two men, who fired several shots at their pursuers as they made their way into the darkness, ———_ FOUGHT SHIP FIRE 8 DAYS. Men Carried ‘Het Bombs From ‘Transport’s Blasing Hold. HONOLULU, Aug. 7.—For eight days Capt. Eugene McCarthy and ‘the crew of the United States army transport Marica fought @ fire in the ship's cargo of munitions while the ammuni- tion was exploding, it was learned he: recently on the tranaport’s return from Manila. Smoke was seen Iseuing from @ hatch at night during the ship's last voyage to the Philippines, A general alarm Was sounded and water was turned into the hold, where 4,000 tons Of at junition of all sizes were stored, “Explosions were taking place every tittle" while," anid Capt. | McCarthy, “The cargo in luded ‘shrapnel’ shells, | hand grenades, detonating fuses, bomiss | My men | of munitions moment from em overboard. carried case ir likely to explode at old and threw 80 the men wore gloves. | bas had to leave the hold, batten dows patches nd turn on the smothering | pes. 'e m flooded the hold nights later the blaze was extin: Guished,”* GIRL STOWAWAY ‘SHIMMIED.’ Danced Herself Off New Roc! and Into Obscurity. The mystery of the female stowa- way taken off the New Rochelle at Quarantine Wednesday night, brought back here and freed, was heightened yesterday when “three names were §Iven to her and at none of various addresses named had she ever been known. The reason assigned for put- ting her off the ghip was that al had no ticket and that during tho night she “cut up capers” and insisted upon shimmying too much, The steamship company's preas agent could not be located elther. Consequently information was not ob- tainable to why a woman of! mystery should be found on the naid- | en ship of the maiden vo newest N CLOTHES MUST PAY FARES ON SUBWAY | 'E high cost of being a plain cop was demonstrated to- day to pol camen in civilian clothes on thelr way to report for duty. They have to pay fure now on the Interborough subway, in- stead of simply showing ther shields to the ticket chopper. An order issued last night makes it compulsory for all members of the Police Department wearing “white shields” to buy tickets According to an agent the onder reads: “Agents will hereafter collect fares from all police officers not in uniform, excepting those dis- LOVE FOR PARKER GME, MRS CHISHOLM WOULD 60 HOME (Continued From First Page.) ing right. But'I do miss my home. “And then,” continued Mra, Chis- holm, “it is no easy thing to live on $18 a week nowadays. I pay $36 a month for my room and that leaves me exactly $1.50 a d@y to eat and dress on.” “I can see you are very much dis- satisfed with your new surroundings,” I said to Mrs. Chisholm. “Don't you think it quite possible that you will in time return to your home .and Mr. Chisholm?” . “I am afraid I have appreciated Mr. Ohisholm too late,” was the sad reply. “Then you do not care for Mr. Parker now?" “Not at all.” “Not even in a platonic way? “I have found him out,” said Mrs, Chisholm, with the tears springing into her eyes, “I always respected Mr. Chisholm, but I thought I loved Mr. Parker. Now, I find that I have | mo respect for Mr. Parker at’al), and when a woman loses her respect for a man there 4s no love. PURSUED BY PARKER MANY YEARS, SHE SAYS. “I will tell you as woman to woman that Mr. Parker has always annoyed me and followed me. Long before J wag married, when I was only eighteen and a young schoolteacher, Mr. Parker used to follow me to dances and par- ties, and I used to laugh about his attentiong to the girls. "I knew he was @ married man much older then I, and I was too clever to be caught in his snares, Then, when I was married, like all women, I thought things were diffe: ent. Gradually I began to be nic to him. When we bad our summer cottages at Culver's Lake, N. J., we saw a great deal of each other and | I really believed I loved him. Then | it was that Mr. Chisholm called Mr. Parker and put up that ultimatum “take her or leave her.” Mr. Chis- holm saw that I was infatuated and ike a father he wanted to make things right for me. At that time | \I would have gladly obtained a dt- |vorce from my husband and married Mr, Parker. But Mrs. Parker s In ‘the way and then it that 1} began to realize what a cad he was | not to take things In his own hands “On one occasion after that he tried to get me to elope with him but I refused. Then the next week he called me up again and was so in- sistent that I actually took my auto- mobile to his studio and we started | off together, But he was so white | and seemed so frightened that I lost all respect for him and drove him} back. I saw him in his true Hght “It was then I made up my mind to support myself and work out my | own salvation They : that we have to have a ceriain amount of sorrow in our lives to make us ® things as they are. I may keep on working, there may be a reconcill-| ation, I do not know—but I dor spect Mr, Chisholm more than any man fn the world and that's all can say.” JERSEY RIF Gov. 1 | _— LE TEAM TO GO. Edwards to Draw on Emer-| gency Fund for Expenses Oho. Gov. Edwards of } Jersey ha agreed to appropriate $1,200 from’ his special emergency fund to send a State team to Camp Perry, Ohlo, to take| part In the national rifle matches b ginning Aug: 23. The War Department had ruled that New Jerscy's nt, owing to th ntl State's inability to send’ men to Perry on Aug. 1 for preliminary ing, would have to go at the tr Stuto's \W ‘od | BRTAN TO ORDER LANDING OF MANN ATA SECRET PORT Captain of Baltic to Be Told by Wireless Name of Des- tination for Prelate. oe ag ay ga (The New York Bening World.) \ LONDON, Aug. 7—The Daily Malt says that it has béon decided by the Government in view of the reporte of rigting in Liverpool not to permit Archbishop Mann{x of Melbourne, to land there. The Captain of the liner Baltic wilt probably be instructed to put the prela Ate ashore at ome secret destinn« tion, the name of which will be con veyed to him by wireless at the last moment. In a leading editorial the Dati Mail considers that the Government is {ll advised in preventing Arche bishop Mannix from landing in Ire« land. “Too much fuss has been made about Mannix,” ft says. “To make a martyr of him is to make a hero uf him. By preventing the Baltic frona touching at Queenstown, and by pre« venting newspaper representatives from going aboard the ship at Livers pool, the Government itself ts worke ing up popular excitement about Mannix which may make its own po= sition extremely difficult, On the lowest ground of political tactics the Government's unwise decision is @ positive gift to the Sinn Fein.” bilo Finns AMUNDSEN STARTS TO-DAY FOR POLE, fill Make Second Attempt to Have Arctic Ice Pack Carry Him to Goal. NOME, ea, Aug. 7—Capt Roald A sen, .Norwegian @Xe wiil ve here to-day to mike his se ‘ ad atterhpt to reach the North Pole, He plans to steer his 1, the Maud for Wrangell Island, of Siberia, and r ut point drift with the Arctie ce pack. Amundsen declared he was certaim ne northern coast of & ss and that he expected the voy to require five years. When the Maud weighs anchor all the ships in Nome Harbor will form in line and escort bh. northern trip a short distance on the ern Second Reach Vole. This will be Capt. Amundsen’s sec« to reach the North Pole. planned the first immediately, r lls return from the Sduth Pdle, in Exp Effort te ond ef He N PARK, MEMORY GONE. GIRL I overing at Bette Thinks welghs 1 own sult and expense if at all. OAT. playing yellow shields, who are entitled to ride free.” The yellow or “gold” shield ts worn by all officers aibove the rank of corporal and patrolman, Hence the fatter will have to pay out of his own pocket, while his superiors ride free, _FUNERAL DIRECTORS. all tastes. OWN STORY OF HIS BASEBALL CAREER [BEGINS MONDAY, AUG; EXQUISITE FLAVOR So Characteristic of It has that full bodied richness whi Ae ORANGE PEKOE Makes it the one perfect tea. ich satisfies Barta ha

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